] M, E EF” itcn'-'l DOI'I ■Mill" 218tfo CEK- piispi- I ?St(» THE BATTALION ednesday, April 5, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 3 ELECTION (Continued From Page 1) Iruce F. Baxter, Clarence T. Gore, Bernard Dawson, Keith A. Mullins, Barton M. Hamill, and Joseph W. Hely. Candidates for office of the 1970 are: President: Ronald L. Adams, James D. Black, Charles C. Em mons, Frank Neal Fore, Gerald Geistweidt, Raford Stanley Har grove, William David Reed, Ron nie Shaw, James F. Stephenson, and John David White. Vice-President: John G. Ban croft, John Bendele, John L. Cas sell, James Dale Conway, James L. Dunn, Douglas Patrick Fon tana, William Garner Fuller, No- comis Jackson, Robert S. Logan, David Gaines McCall, Richard Reese, Robert Stancel, and Mi chael John Welsh. Secretary - Treasurer: Noble Boswell, John Dabney Cunning- barn, Mark Anthony Fairchild, Richard Oran Love, Stephen Har- Dert Simpson, and Tom Ben Weis- baupt. Social Secretary: Carroll Leo Crawley, Paul Hilliard Edmonds, Robert E. Knox, Frank Douglas McDuff, William Hays Steele, Robert T. Smith, and James St. John III. Memorial Student Center Rep resentative: Barry Baverschlag, Larry Arnold Bowles, Dean Tho mas Gshelman, Harry Kay Les ser, James T. Osborn, and Theron Gerald Snider. Campus Job Interviews Reach Record High On-campus interviews have al ready been conducted by 563 companies this year, surpassing last year’s record total of 553. Mrs. Gladys Bishop, Placement Office secretary, said that 13 more companies are scheduled to conduct interviews this week. Approximately 50 more compa nies will be at Texas A&M before interviews are completed April 28. JERRY KRUSE Kruse Is Picked As President Of Arts Association Mrs. Bishop advised anyone who plans to graduate in May to set up some interviews. “If they’re not going right into the service, they better come over to the Placement Office and talk to the company representatives.” “Plenty of jobs are available and anyone who wants to work should be able to get a job,” Mrs. Bishop observed. Senior E.E. Major To Present Paper Eugene H. Cloud, a senior elec trical engineering major, will pre sent a technical paper Friday in i area contest at Ruston, La. John Denison, acting head of A&M’s Electrical Engineering Department, said the contest is sponsored by the Institute of Electricity and Electronics. Accompanying Cloud will be William L. Beasley, assistant pro fessor of electrical engineering. Jerry Kruse of Snyder, a jun ior industrial education major, has been elected president of the National Association of Industrial Arts’ College Students. The organization, affiliated with the American Industrial Arts Association, has 1,400 mem bers in 40 states. Kruse, 21, was installed at a national meeting in Philadelphia. He will preside at the national convention next March in Min neapolis, Minn. Winning offices is nothing new to Kruse. He will be installed June 1 as president of the Texas College Industrial Arts Associa tion. And he is secretary of the Texas A&M Industrial Education Society. Kruse has been a distinguished student two semesters at A&M. He has an overall grade point ratio of 1.81 on a 3-point scale and is a member of Iota Lambda Sigma, national honor fraternity for industrial education students. Kruse’s parents are Mrs. Ber- nell Chapman, 3813 Highland Drive, Snyder, and Hoyle S. Kruse, 1915 Huntington, Mid land. Getting on the list to be inter viewed should not be a problem, according to Mrs. Bishop. Some of the companies have only one or two students on their inter view list while others are almost full. However, most of the repre sentatives will do everything they can to talk to a promising Marketing To Get New Prof Next Autumn Barbara Jean Davis, a doctoral candidate at Northwestern Uni versity, will join the Texas A&M faculty this fall. Dr. John E. Pearson, School of Business Administration head, said Miss Davis will be an assist ant professor in the Marketing Department. Miss Davis expects to receive her Ph.D. in marketing in August at Northwestern. She has mas ter’s and bachelor’s degrees in marketing from the University of Arizona. THE GREAT ISSUES COMMITTEE Memorial Student Center Presents Space Fiesta 1967 MR. JACK N. JAMES WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1967, 8:00 P. M. MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER BALLROOM UNITED STATES AIR FORCE AEROSPACE PRESENTATIONS TEAM Lt. Col. James S. Wall Major Dannie R. Hoskins Capt. David L. Fredrick from Air University, Maxwell A.F.B., Alabama TOPIC: “THE U. S. SPACE PROGRAM” Friday, April 7, 8:00 p. m., Memorial Student Center THE PUBLIC INVITED —NO ADMISSION CHARGE EXHIBITORS: NASA—Manned Spacecraft Center Lunah Orbiter Satellite Spacesuits—Mercury, Gemini, Apollo Gemini space capsule Mercury space capsule—fullsize Apollo space capsule Saturn rocket U. S. Air Force Titan II missile—full scale Space medicine Photographic Society of America—space photographs Office of Naval Research Project Stratoscope Project Skyhook Nuclear Physics Naval Research Laboratory General Dynamics—Fl-11 Southwestern Bell Telephone W estinghouse—laser LTV Aerospace Corporation Naval Ordnance Laboratory General Electric North American Aviation Texas A&M Activation Analysis Laboratory Grumann Aircraft Engineering McDonnell Company FILMS: “Apollo Lunar Mission Profile” “Apollo/Satum 202 Quick Look” “Destination Moon” “Extravechicular Activity—Gemini IV” “Gemini XI” “Living in Space” “Missile From the Sea” “National Space Program for 1970” “ONE FORZERO” “Progress Toward Mach 3” “Project Gemini Mission Review 1965” “Returns From Space” “Roads to the Stars” ' “Telestar” “The Story of the X-15” “Titan Rocket Power” Films will be shown continuously throughout the day during the entire Space Fiesta ’67 Week in the Memorial Student Center. COMING LATER A WALK THROUGH TITAN II MISSILE PUBLIC CORDIALLY INVITED prospect. The reason for the expansion in interviewing is due to company expansion. “Most of the companies are ex panding and want to hire every one their representatives talk to. This is in direct contrast to practice in the past. In former years, companies recruited a great deal but they were looking only for the exceptional student. Now hiring firms believe they can train most college graduates to do the job they want done. Many of the firms now con ducting interviews were also at the Placement Office last fall. Mrs. Bishop said that most of the companies’ representatives inter view two days in the fall and one in the spring. They try to see December and May graduates in the fall and tell the May gradu ates that they will be back in the spring if the person being inter viewed wants to see them,Again. So many companies are inter viewing now that not enough rooms are available in the Place ment Office for conducting inter views. The offices of the vari ous student publications have been pressed into use due to lack of space in the regular interview rooms. PEANUTS v’ v, By Charles M. Schulz IF P0KNT LIKE IT, WHV DOES HE KEEP FLVIN6 DOWN THERE EVERY YEAR? FINAL CALL! WE'RE MOVING Everything Goes BIB IfJUUC m £ w WHITEWALLS or BLACKWALLS 4 for Plus 37f! to 55* per tire Fed. Ex. Tax, sales tax. and 4 trade-in Nn 9 # r « Sfe ' s4,or!54H Money down tires of same size off your car. Take months to pay! Tinstone j ■ DLC-lOO New Treads m Guaranteed like new tires! NATIONWIDE "IMO LIMIT" GUARANTEE Our re n - ce with terms of our printed guaranTee. Price of -placement pro-rated dn original tread design wear nd based on Firestone adjustment price for replace- nent retread at time of adjustment. 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